Written by 11:30 pm Opinions • 10 Comments

Google+ vs. Facebook: Social Media Showdown

 

Illustration by Alicia Toldi.

Time and time again, Google has attempted to expand its web empire into the realm of social networking. Try though it may, Google’s efforts in the form of Buzz, Wave and Orkut have failed thus far to touch Facebook’s monopoly. Google+ is almost certainly the site’s most ambitious attempt yet, claiming a more practical and integrated feature set than its chief competitor.

And Google+ certainly does have a lot to offer. Though it lacks some of the sharing options offered by Facebook, in particular newer auto-sharing features like Spotify and news reader, the site is actually about your friends. No, not those 600 people that you kind of knew in high school that now spam your news feed, but your actual friends. Every feature of the site is about making it easy to compartmentalize your friendships—aside from the Circles feature, which allows you to separate information-sharing based on what circle of connections you place friends in, Hangouts and Huddles focuses on group video and messaging chat rather than just one-on-one.

Though these features seem good enough on paper, this article won’t touch on how well the site actually functions. This is, simply put, because I don’t have any friends who use Google+. Sure, I added a few friends to my circles when I first got an account late this summer, but not a single new post has appeared in my Stream since August. This Google+ abandonment is one half of the vicious cycle that seems to be holding the site back, along with the absence of the aforementioned auto-sharing options that the Zuckerberg camp is so fond of.

Sure, auto-sharing may be a thinly veiled data mining scheme that sends all of your web activity to Facebook (who converts it to warehouses of hundred dollar bills with the help of advertisers), but if you’re even remotely concerned about your privacy you probably stopped using the site a few years ago. One could argue that it’s a bit evil of Facebook to sell all of your data without making this more clear, but maybe it’s a necessary evil. It’s the connections to everything from iPhoto and Photo

Booth to location-aware mobile activity that do such a good job of making sure you can’t forget that Facebook has you under its spell. Since the site already has a healthy portion of us invested in it, there are plenty of people to populate the newsfeed. It really is a vicious cycle, no doubt aided by the allure of that mindless newsfeed scrolling we can’t help but fall into every so often.

Auto-sharing is part of a bigger push toward developer integration that has completely altered the side in recent years, both for the end user and Facebook’s revenue stream. Though sharing of news and photos tends naturally to make up the meat of social networking, third party offerings from Farmville to Bumper Stickers have helped to diversify Facebook’s offerings.

Though it offers a limited catalogue of games, Google+ leans toward a closed ecosystem, populated primarily with Google-developed features. The logic here is pretty simple: Google’s open Android mobile platform has had trouble capturing the market with the ease that the closely-curated iOS has had. That being said, it may come to a matter of personal preference between Facebook’s unlimited catalogue of mostly mediocre applications or Google+’s small, integrated platform.

Though it would be tricky for Google to make its site as addicting as Facebook without jeopardizing privacy, it’s certainly possible. Considering Google’s sprawling monopoly over web interaction, they could do a better job of promoting use of the site. However, even if Google+ had the strongest possible set of features, there’s a chance it would take more than a strong competitor to dethrone Facebook. Facebook’s got an incomprehensible critical mass advantage that makes the notion of packing up and moving to Google+ a bit too much of a gamble for most users. At the rate Facebook has been under fire over privacy concerns, though, the wait may not be long before users have had enough. •

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